A trove of letters penned by Lester Harper, a farmer from northern B.C. who fought on the front lines in the First World War, are the foundation of a new book by Canadian historian Brandon Marriott.
By RUSSELL MOORMAN Special Contributor Every Veterans Day, we remember the fallen. When Veterans Day was founded as Armistice ...
As nations across the globe observe Remembrance Day, also known as Armistice Day or Veterans Day, the specter of new conflict ...
The Where They Called Home sign project in Sarnia identifies where fallen soldiers once lived and provides commemorative ...
Driven by her mother’s grief, Helen Durie helped illegally exhume her WWI soldier brother from France. She’s being recognized ...
Canada's Unknown Soldier — a casualty of the First World War — was brought home to be interred in Ottawa 25 years ago, and ...
What do displays of national pride mean when they are no longer accompanied by the mass shared grief that gave rise to them?
The former brigadier-general who successfully advocated for the establishment of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at the ...
The city’s RSLs will hold services at cenotaphs across the Gold Coast, while schools and workplaces hold their own ...